While Oscar Wilde is now strongly associated with the tone of whimsy that imbues his breezy, effortlessly witty epigrams and essays, the Irish writer and playwright was also a serious thinker who, having been sentenced to two years of hard labor as a punishment for his homosexuality, was deeply engaged with the social issues of his day. This essay, penned as a letter to a newspaper soon after Wilde's release from prison, takes up the moral issue of penal sentences for juveniles, a question that still has great relevance today.
- Most popular
- Get Your Comics!
- Duke Classics
- The Great Outdoors
- Unwrap Holiday Reading
- It Is a Truth Universally Acknowledged
- Did You Miss Me?
- See all ebooks collections
- Recently Added Audiobooks
- All Audiobooks
- Quick Listens
- Full Cast Audiobooks
- Family Road Trip Listening (OD Max)
- Audiobooks narrated by Simon Vance
- Audiobooks narrated by Scott Brick
- Audiobooks narrated by Julia Whelan
- The Great Outdoors
- Unwrap Holiday Reading
- Exceed Your Reading Goal
- It Is a Truth Universally Acknowledged
- Did You Miss Me?
- See all audiobooks collections